African agrivoltaics platform launches to unlock project pipelines and finance

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The initiative was introduced during a workshop at OECD headquarters, organized by the Consortium for Sustainable Agrivoltaics (C4SA) Foundation, OECD’s Development Centre, Akademiya2063 and the UN Joint SDG Fund. The event brought together government representatives, development finance institutions, investors, researchers and private-sector actors to define a coordinated approach to agrivoltaics deployment.

The platform aims to address persistent barriers to scale, including limited access to finance, regulatory uncertainty, weak project pipelines and gaps in technical capacity and data availability.

Focus on bankability and scale

Participants emphasized that while agrivoltaics is gaining traction globally, deployment in Africa remains at an early stage. Evidence from pilot projects suggests potential to improve land-use efficiency, support agricultural productivity, enhance climate resilience and expand distributed solar generation. However, translating these outcomes into bankable projects remains a central challenge.

Discussions focused on the need to structure agrivoltaics as an investable asset class. This includes developing standardized project models, improving data on agronomic and energy performance, and aligning system design with local farming practices and market conditions.

A key proposal explored during the workshop was the creation of a blended finance facility dedicated to agrivoltaics in Africa. Such a vehicle could support early-stage development, provide risk mitigation tools and mobilize private capital alongside public and concessional funding.

The African Development Bank signaled interest in and support for growing the sector, highlighting agrivoltaics as aligned with broader efforts to expand energy access and strengthen the food-energy-water nexus.

Platform structure and priorities

The AAPI is intended to support participating governments in developing policy frameworks while facilitating coordination with non-governmental partners. In addition to supporting member governments, it will be supported by three working groups covering evidence and capacity-building, project finance and agri-solar business development. A core objective is to

build a pipeline of bankable projects across different agro-ecological zones, supported by concessional finance, improved research and data, technical standards and local capacity.

Government engagement during the launch indicated interest in aligning agrivoltaics with African regional and national priorities, including food security strategies, energy transition plans and international and climate commitments. C4SA President Chris Hegadorn, pointing to the negative impacts of the closure of the Straits of Hormuz, including higher food, fuel, and fertilizer prices for African consumers, noted the high potential for agrivoltaics to foster Africa’s food and energy sovereignty while helping to adapt to and mitigate climate change.

Partnerships and early-stage activity

Numerous partnerships were announced alongside the launch, spanning training, research and project development. These include planned agrivoltaics training programs in West and East Africa, collaboration on evidence generation and technical guidelines, and early-stage project development initiatives in multiple countries.

Private-sector participants signaled interest in supporting project pipelines and participating in the platform’s working groups. Discussions included the potential development of dedicated investment vehicles, including a potential venture capital fund focused on agrivoltaics opportunities in African markets.

The initiative builds on international policy momentum, including a G7 commitment in Pescara, Italy in 2024 to support agrivoltaics partnerships with Africa. Participants called upon the G7 to honor its commitment, and pointed to the need for near-term implementation, particularly in the context of upcoming international engagements such as the May, 2026 France-Africa Summit to be held in Nairobi, Kenya and the G7 Summit in France.

Next steps

The platform will now move to formalize its governance structure, launch its working groups and expand participation among African governments and financial partners. Resource mobilization and pipeline development are expected to be immediate priorities.

For developers and investors, the success of the initiative will depend on its ability to translate coordination into execution—particularly in structuring projects that meet both agricultural and energy performance requirements while achieving commercial viability.

The launch of AAPI reflects a shift toward more structured market development for agrivoltaics in Africa, with a focus on standardization, financing mechanisms and scalable project pipelines. Inquiries on the Platform can be directed to: Consortium4SA@gmail.com.